Very thorough and well-documented -- glad to see the prefectural govt giving us updates and showing how the levels are dropping. Their also saying the dilution ratio is 1/85, which is even lower than I was thinking.

Chip wrote:Hopefully there is disaster relief aide available to the affected farmers.

Sadly, but this seems not the case. Government is busy pushing through tax raise and solve problems with each other And for many it will be really difficult to prove too. There are many examples, like cherry farms where people usually went to pick up cherry's directly from trees. Tests showed that it was safe to eat, but no one visiting, now it's rotting.

But one positive note since this disaster, a lot more activity regarding power savings and renewable energy sources, especially solar. People are more aware, that if they won't stop using electricity on unnecessary stuff, number of nuclear power plants will only increase.

Chip wrote:Hopefully there is disaster relief aide available to the affected farmers.

Sadly, but this seems not the case. Government is busy pushing through tax raise and solve problems with each other And for many it will be really difficult to prove too. There are many examples, like cherry farms where people usually went to pick up cherry's directly from trees. Tests showed that it was safe to eat, but no one visiting, now it's rotting.

But one positive note since this disaster, a lot more activity regarding power savings and renewable energy sources, especially solar. People are more aware, that if they won't stop using electricity on unnecessary stuff, number of nuclear power plants will only increase.

Personally, because I am taking students to Japan in the fall, and because I just left there a month ago, and because I will be going back there for most of next summer, and because I want to try to be as informed as possible about this, I want to look at ALL the available information that I can find on the radiation situation there.

That is because it is a dynamic situaton (as the numbers in the posting I listed above tend to indicate), that every group/person who publishes such information has their bias, that there will be errors (and that is NOT necessarily indicative of a "cover up").

Chip wrote:Hopefully there is disaster relief aide available to the affected farmers.

Chip,

I think that no government in any country in the world is able to deal well with disasters like this ....and I'm including the earthquake and tsunami here. The scale is just too big, the cost is just too high, and the logistical aspects of doing it fairly are about impossible.

Polititians make noises.... because they need to keep any panic down....and thay want to get re-elected. But they know they can't really DO what needs to be done. They'll never SAY it.

Likely many of those farmers will suffer. Many will lose everything before this is over.

A terrible sad reality of life, proven in natural (and man-made) disater after disaster in the world.

a.serrao wrote:That is because it is a dynamic situaton (as the numbers in the posting I listed above tend to indicate), that every group/person who publishes such information has their bias, that there will be errors (and that is NOT necessarily indicative of a "cover up").